Friday, September 2, 2016

KHCPL’s book discussion program kicks off in September. We
have selected an exciting and diverse group of books for the 2016/2017 program.
Multiple copies of each selection will be available at each location one month prior to its discussion. Audio, large print, and digital editions may also be available, and KHCPL staff members will be happy to place a hold on these items for you.

Participants may attend any or all discussions. To register for book
discussions, simply contact the KHCPL location at which you wish to attend. Discussions are held on the first Friday of the month at KHCPL Russiaville, the second Wednesday of the month at KHCPL Main, and on the third Thursday of the month at KHCPL South.

Girl Waits with Gun by Amy Stewartwas inspired by the unbelievable true story of Constance Kopp who in 1914 became one of the first female deputy
sheriffs. After Kopp sisters’ horse and buggy is struck by an automobile driven
by an unscrupulous factory owner, Constance attempts to collect $50 in damages.
Rather than pay up, he unleashes his gang of thugs on the sisters. Threats quickly
give way to bricks, which escalate to arson
and bullets, but Constance sticks to her guns and insists upon seeking justice
through the law.

September 14, 2016 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

January 19, 2017 · 6:30 pm @ KHCPL South

April 7, 2017 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald is a heartfelt memoir of bereavement. After the unexpected
death of her father, Macdonald channels her grief into training a goshawk, a
sometimes insurmountable challenge for the most experienced falconers. For
guidance and consolation, she turns tothe author of The Once and Future KingT.H. White’s account of his failed attempt to tame the same
bird. The resulting book is a mix of biography, falconry, folklore, and
literary meditation.

October 12, 2016 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

February 16, 2017 · 6:30 pm @ KHCPL South

May 5, 2017 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

The Martian by Andy Weir is the thrilling story of astronaut Mark Watney who, after
being mistakenly assumed dead, was abandoned on Mars by his crewmates. Through
a series of log entries, Watney describes his struggle to survive and his
attempt to return to earth. The unique blend of actual hard science, action
adventure, and pop culture narrated by a character who is a likeable funny
everyman makes this a book that both science fiction fans and ordinary readers
will enjoy.

gulag over the course of a single
day. The story is a Russian classic, revealing the brutality of Soviet regime.
Its publication resulted in the author being branded an enemy of the state and
expelled from the USSR.

October 20, 2016 · 6:30 pm @ KHCPL South

February 3, 2017 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

April 12, 2017 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

Our Souls at Night by Kent Harufis the poignant bittersweet story of widow Addie Moore and
widower Louis Waters. When Addie presents Louis with the proposal that they
keep each other company at night, town gossip ignites. The pair quickly form a
deepening bond through nights of shared memories until meddling relatives wage
a campaign to keep them apart. This is a powerful contemplation of love, grief,
and aging.

October 7, 2016 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

January 11, 2017 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

no discussion at KHCPL
South

The Snow Child by Eowyn Iveyis set against the brutal landscape of 1920s Alaska. As childless
couple Jack and Mabel struggle to survive on their homestead, they encounter a
mysterious girl living feral in the wilderness. Uncertain whether she is real
child or a supernatural being, she quickly becomes a surrogate daughter to
them, vanishing each year when the snow melts and returning each year when the
snow begins to fall.

March 3, 2017 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

May 10, 2017 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

no discussion at KHCPL
South

The Storied Life of
A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevinis the story of a persnickety bookstore owner on a small
island off the coast of Massachusetts. Still mourning the death of his wife,
A.J. drinks himself into a stupor one night only to discover his priceless rare
bookhas been stolen when he wakes
up. Things take an even stranger turn when, shortly thereafter, a baby is
abandoned in his store while he is out jogging.

September 2, 2016 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

November 9, 2016 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

March 16, 2017 · 6:30 pm @ KHCPL South

Tell the Wolves I’m
Home by Carol Rifka Brunt is set during the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s. After the
death of her beloved uncle Finn, 14-year-old June feels like she has lost the
only person who ever understood her. She secretly forms a friendship with her
uncle’s partner whom the family blames for Finn’s death, and together they
navigate their immense grief.

November 4, 2016 · 10:30 am @ KHCPL Russiaville

February 8, 2017 · 10:00 am @ KHCPL Main

May 18, 2017 · 6:30 pm @ KHCPL South

The Flying Circus by Susan Crandallfollows Henry Schuler, a child of German immigrants on the
run for a crime he didn’t commit, Charles “Gil” Gilchrist, a WWI pilot
struggling with guilt and trauma, and Cora Rose Haviland, a rebellious high
society girl escaping an arranged marriage designed to salvage her family’s
fortune, as their lives unexpectedly intertwine. Together they find themselves
traveling the Midwest with a flying circus.

Please join us for the Howard County Reads #1 book discussion.

October 19, 2016 · 6:00 pm @ KHCPL South.

Howard County Reads Author Event with Susan Crandall will be held at Kresge Auditorium.

November 17, 2016 · 7:00 pm @ IU Kokomo.

KHCPL South will host the interactive exhibition Discover
Tech from February 22 to May 19, 2017. This exhibition will introduce young
audiences to engineering and technology -- both high- and low-tech. As part of
the celebration, there will be a special discussion of a STEM-focused book. Stay tuned for the book announcement.

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Since 1896, the modern
Olympics has brought together the world through its multi-sport events. The games are held in major cities throughout the world such as Athens,
Paris, London, Tokyo, and Moscow. This August all eyes will be on Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, as they host the XXXI summer Olympiad. To learn more about Rio's iconic statue, check out this documentary featuring the seven wonders of Brazilian spirituality. If you're planning on watching the Olympics in person, you may want to take along this handy travel guide.

Although
Indiana has never hosted an Olympic game, the Hoosier state does have some
connections through athletes and qualifying trials for the games.

Indiana basketball legend Larry Bird made up the
historic “Dream Team” in 1992 along with Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. They
were the first U.S. Olympic basketball team made up of professional athletes.
They won the gold medal with an average 44 points lead.

Basketball great Oscar Robertson led Indianapolis’s Crispus
Attucks High School to the state title in 1955. This was the first time an
all-African-American team had won a state championship. In 1960 he co-captained
the U.S. Olympic team which brought home the gold.

Indiana University Natatorium on the IUPUI campus has been host to the 13 US Olympic
Trials, including swimming, diving, and synchronized swimming. Most recently,
the natatorium underwent a nearly $20 million in renovation to host
the 2016 diving trials.

Indiana University has long been a strong athletic contributor to the games.
Until Michael Phelps came along, IU swimmer Mark Spitz held the record for
most gold medals in a single Olympic game with winning a total seven gold medals at the 1972 Summer Olympics. A native of
California, Mark came to Indiana University to train with
legendary swim coach “Doc” Councilman. His record breaking performance proved
this was a good move.

Indiana University isn’t the only Indiana college
sending athletes to the Olympics in diving. Purdue University is sending two divers.
Olympic gold medalist David Boudai will be joined by Steele Johnson. They will compete
together in synchronized diving and against each other in the 10
meter dive.

There a many more
athletes with Indiana connections. Some are representing other countries such as golfer and Purdue University student Paula Retowho
will represent her native South Africa. For more information on the sports, athletes, and history of the games visit the official Olympics site.

Thursday, June 30, 2016

This year Indiana is celebrating its Bicentennial, and KHCPL
is celebrating all things Indiana during the Summer Reading program. We invite you to book through time with us and explore Indiana's rich literary history. Hoosiers have always been
writers, earning a reputation as "a scribbling and forthputting people"
as early as 1827.

An early environmentalist, the natural world features
heavily in Gene Stratton Porter’s work. She used her income and influence for
some of the earliest conservation efforts to preserve Indiana wetlands. Her
most famous book is A Girl of the Limberlost, which is set in the Limberlost Swamp near her home in
Geneva.

James Whitcomb Riley earned the title “The
Children’s Poet” as well as “The Hoosier Poet.” He began his career by using
local dialect and everyday working class speech in his poetry. He later
switched to writing poems specifically for children. Following his death, the
Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis was founded in his honor. It was the first
hospital in Indiana that exclusively served children.

Indiana’s next literary boom occurred during World War II
with Ernie Pyle and Kurt Vonnegut as the most notable Hoosier writers of the Greatest
Generation.

War correspondent Ernie Pyle, an Indiana native and Indiana
University alumni, sent dispatches from first the home front and then the European and Pacific
theaters. Pyle wrote war reports from the perspective the ordinary soldiers
rather than the commanding officers. His gritty accounts of "dogface"
infantrymen earned him a Pulitzer Prize for journalism just prior to his
death at the Battle of Okinawa.

Novelist Kurt Vonnegut is known for his trademark blend of
satire, science fiction, and social issues. After being captured by Germans
during the Battle of the Bulge, Kurt Vonnegut survived the Allied firebombing
of Dresden where he was being held as a prisoner of war. This experience formed
the basis of his novel Slaughterhouse-Five. His hometown of Indianapolis often appeared in his fiction
as a symbol of traditional American values.

Laurell K. Hamilton has two series: the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series and the Merry Gentry series. Anita Blake raises zombies and slays vampires in
fictionalized St. Louis while Meredith Gentry is a faeire princess and private
detective under constant threat of assassination.

Karen Marie Moning also has two series: the Fever
series and the Highlander series.
The Fever series is set in Ireland, chronicling MacKayla Lane’s unexpected
journey into the dangerous and intriguing world of the Fae. The Highlander
series is set in mediaeval Scotland, following a series of supernaturally
inclined clansman as they battle for power and love.

The two most famous Hoosier authors are actually cartoonists
responsible for creating two of the most memorable children’s characters: Clifford the Big Red Dog and Garfield the lasagna loving, overweight orange cat.

Norman Bridwell was born and raised right here in Kokomo. During one of his
many unsuccessful attempts to get a job as a children’s illustrator, an editor at the publishing house made
the offhand suggestion that he should turn one of his drawings into a story,
and Clifford the Big Red Dog was born.

Jim Davis grew up on a farm outside Fairmount with 25 cats. His first
successful comic strip was Gnorm Gnat,
which ran in a small Indiana newspaper but was rejected for national
syndication because as, the editors expressed, “nobody can relate to bugs.”
When casting about for a new idea, Davis recalled his childhood experience and
created Garfield.

Indiana is also a power player when it comes to teen fiction.

Young adult author
John Green is Indiana’s current literary superstar. His novel The Fault in Our Starsbecame an international bestseller, and the film adaption
met with critical success. The story is set in Indianapolis and features the
Funky Bones
interactive statue commissioned by the Indianapolis Museum of Art.

This is only a taste of what Hoosier writers have to offer.
If you would like to read local this summer, ask a librarian for more
suggestions.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Summer is often thought of as a time to relax and kick back with a great beach read; however, challenge yourself this summer with our great Summer Reading Program and a little summer learning. KHCPL is bursting with the fun, unusual, and unexpected in the world of nonfiction. Here are a few of our favorites:

Banana: The Fate of the Fruit that Changed the World
You might think we’re bananas for recommending a book entirely about a single yellow fruit, but this fascinating read will take you along on the exciting adventure of getting a small tropical fruit halfway across the globe and into American hands in an era before refrigeration. It also explores the delicate future of this beloved fruit, which is the fourth most harvested crop on Earth (yes, only wheat, rice, and corn beat out this distinctive fruit).

Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void
Ok, maybe bananas aren’t your thing – but who hasn’t dreamed of shooting off into space? The author of Stiff and Bonk explores the irresistibly strange universe of space travel and life without gravity. Space is a world devoid of the things we need to live and thrive: air, gravity, hot showers, fresh produce, privacy, and beer! Space exploration is in some ways an exploration of what it means to be human. How much can a person give up? What happens if you vomit in your helmet during a spacewalk? Is it possible for the human body to survive a bailout at 17,000 miles per hour? To answer these questions, Mary Roach explores (and often participates in) all manner of quizzical and startlingly bizarre space simulations.

Salt, Sugar, Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us
Have you fallen behind on your New Year’s resolutions to get fit? Here’s a great book to jumpstart your health goals. This bestseller chronicles the frightening ways that the food industry uses the addicting combo of salt, sugar, and fat to keep you buying – and keep you fat! Though be warned – you might never look at your grocery store the same again. Don’t want to read this book? Why not try the audio download available through OverDrive.

Consider the Fork: A History of How We Cook and Eat
When we think of technology, we often turn to our iPhones and computers; however, thousands of years of trial-and-error lead to the development of our common kitchen wares. Travel the globe with Bee Wilson to see how the technologies of cooking and eating have developed in different cultures throughout time.

Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs
Say cheese! In this acclaimed memoir from photographer Sally Mann, she traces her own family history in the American South and examines the role it has played in her legendary career. Sorting through boxes of family papers and yellowed photographs, she finds more than she bargained for: deceit and scandal, alcohol, domestic abuse, car crashes, bogeymen, clandestine affairs, dearly loved and disputed family land, racial complications, vast sums of money made and lost, the return of the prodigal son, and maybe even murder.

Don’t have time to read this summer? Why not try one of our blockbuster documentaries?

"Fed Up"
Narrated by Katie Couric, this film blows the lid off everything previously known about food and exercise. The documentary follows a group of children and their families as they battle childhood obesity.

"Cartel Land"
In the Mexican state of Michoacán, Dr. José Mireles, a small-town physician known as "El Doctor," leads the Autodefensas, which is a citizen uprising against the violent Knights Templar drug cartel. Meanwhile, in Arizona's Altar Valley, Tim "Nailer" Foley, an American veteran, heads a small paramilitary group called Arizona Border Recon whose goal is to stop Mexico's drug wars from seeping across the US border.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Are you all set for the Greatest Spectacle in Racing? This year will be the Indy 500’s one hundredth running, so whether or not you’re a race fan, it’s a great year to learn a few new things about the race.

Did you know that the 500 has its very own historian? Donald Davis, a native of Britain, can spout -- or write -- basically any race history you’d like to know and proves it in this official history of the race. If you’d like to learn some trivia, Indianapolis 500: A Century of Excitement, with a chapter on each decade the race has existed, should do the trick. Are you up for something darker? Read about the year they stopped the 500. If you just need to attend a party and sound smart, take a few minutes to learn about the legends who have driven Indy.

For a more interactive option, consider visiting an exhibit commemorating the anniversary or plan a trip to the track’s Hall of Fame Museum. To pick up just enough to impress your friends, memorize a few key facts about the Borg-Warner trophy, including how tall it is and how much it weighs, or find out what happened to the Apperson Jack Rabbit that ran in the 1911 race.

What if your attention span for all things racing is limited (or possibly nonexistent)? You can’t go wrong with mystery stories that all revolve around the race, so pick up Racing Can Be Murder. Stretch it a little farther, and fans of Janet Evanovich could be enjoying a tale of car chases and kisses on the pretext that it’s about auto racing with Metro Girl. You might even be willing to learn the basics of NASCAR when it’s laugh-out-loud funny in the hands of bestseller Sharyn McCrumb’s Once Around the Track.

If you can’t be at the race track, the events are broadcast on both television and radio. Serious race fans will also be watching the Monaco Grand Prix and NASCAR’s Charlotte 600 though it is not yet possible to see them all in person. Luckily for us, we are near to the most important location in motor racing.

If you’ll be taking in the excitement of the race in person, expect things to look a little different this year due to Project 100. Get your tickets and check out the parking map ahead of time. Most of all, have a great time being a part of history as it happens.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

[Game of Thrones contains mature themes in all formats.
Viewer and reader discretion is advised.]

Season 6 premieres on April 24!If you haven’t already seen the official
trailer, start here.

The internet abounds with fan analyses of the trailer's content. If
you’re curious about the different interpretations, try this academic article from Time Magazine, this saucy British YouTube commentary, and this lite pop culture take.

The biggest question for this season is whether or not Jon
Snow is actually dead. To voice your opinion, you can vote in The Hollywood Reporter’s poll. The cast members have been dodging this question with a variety of ways running the gamut from cryptic to confrontational.

In his most recent interview, the actor who plays Jon Snow
insists that his character is dead and will not be resurrected in the upcoming
episodes. But fan speculation dismisses this as mere subterfuge.

Do you have trouble keeping the characters straight? There are several online
character encyclopedias that can help you keep track of who is who and their complex series of interrelationships.

The fan site Westeros breaks down characters by
television season, fictional region, and alphabetically by first name. The Game of Thrones wiki sorts character entries alphabetically and by popularity and
includes a variety of subcategories by subject. The Tower of the Hand offers
information on the different houses and provides handy family trees.

If you’re
interested in a character’s strictly literary life, a Wiki of Ice and Fire has
entries categorized by point of view, affiliation, and region as well as
organized alphabetically.

If you want to reread your favorite characters' story lines in
anticipation of the sixth season or sixth book, a Wiki of Ice and Fire has
created tables of contents for all five published novels. For each book, there
is a list the point of view characters along with the corresponding page
numbers for the hardcover, paperback, and eBook formats. And don't forget KHCPL has the entire series available in print, on eBook, on audio CD, and on audio download.

George
R. R. Martin announced that The Winds of
Winter, the upcoming book in the series,will not be finished before Season 6 airs as he had previously hoped. Disappointed fans who are tempted to lash out in anger over
this turn of events may want to revisit Neil Gaiman’s legendary blog post on this very subject. But not to despair, Martin has promised readers that he is working exclusively on The Winds of
Winter and will not write anything else until he has finished it. He
even released a chapter excerpt as a teaser.

Following up on his word of warning about the divergence
between the novels and the television series,
Martin revealed that the plot twist in The Winds of Winter will involve a character who, while still alive in the
books, had been killed off in the television show.